Abstract

We developed a new instrument, the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI), to assess 10 behavioral disturbances occurring in dementia patients: delusions, hallucinations, dysphoria, anxiety, agitation/aggression, euphoria, disinhibition, irritability/lability, apathy, and aberrant motor activity. The NPI uses a screening strategy to minimize administration time, examining and scoring only those behavioral domains with positive responses to screening questions. Both the frequency and the severity of each behavior are determined. Information for the NPI is obtained from a caregiver familiar with the patient's behavior. Studies reported here demonstrate the content and concurrent validity as well as between-rater, test-retest, and internal consistency reliability; the instrument is both valid and reliable. The NPI has the advantages of evaluating a wider range of psychopathology than existing instruments, soliciting information that may distinguish among different etiologies of dementia, differentiating between severity and frequency of behavioral changes, and minimizing administration time.

Keywords

DysphoriaIrritabilityApathyPsychopathologyPsychologyDisinhibitionClinical psychologyAnxietyDementiaAggressionEuphoriantPsychiatryConvergent validityPsychometricsInternal consistencyCognitionMedicine

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Year
1994
Type
article
Volume
44
Issue
12
Pages
2308-2308
Citations
7379
Access
Closed

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Jeffrey L. Cummings, Michael S. Mega, Kevin F. Gray et al. (1994). The Neuropsychiatric Inventory. Neurology , 44 (12) , 2308-2308. https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.44.12.2308

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DOI
10.1212/wnl.44.12.2308